Two ways to look at the University of Washington's first appearance in the NCAA men's basketball tournament since the simpler days, back when the FBI wasn't the the principal force in college basketball.

From 30,000 feet: Sunday's selection marks an astonishing accomplishment, given that two years ago, following a 9-22 season and the firing of coach Lorenzo Romar, the program looked as bleak as Australia's Outback in The Road Warrior.

LAS VEGAS - Decades have passed since the Pac-12 has seen the feats Matisse Thybulle and the Washington Huskies have produced this season. The Pac-12 wasn’t even the Pac-12 the last time such things were accomplished.

Team-wise, the biggest thing Friday night at T-Mobile Arena was that No. 1-seeded Washington advanced to its first Pac-12 Conference tourney championship game since the 2010-11 season with a 66-61 semifinal victory (box) over the Colorado Buffaloes.

LAS VEGAS - The sigh of relief covered the entire 1,700 miles from southern Nevada to Seattle.

Despite controlling the pace almost from start to finish, the No. 1-seeded Washington Huskies needed a mistake from eighth-seeded USC with five seconds to play to ensure a 78-75, first-round Pac-12 Tournament victory (box) Wednesday at T-Mobile Arena.

After a relatively easy dispatch of ninth-seeded Arizona 78-65 Wednesday in the opening game of the Pac-12 Conference men's basketball tourney in Las Vegas, eighth-seeded USC draws No. 1 seeded Washington at noon Thursday in a quarterfinal matchup. The Huskies beat the Trojans 75-62 in the teams' only meeting Jan. 30 at Hec Ed.

The Pac-12 Conference announced Monday that sophomore guard Jaylen Nowell was player of the year and coach Mike Hopkins repeated as coach of the year, as did senior Matisse Thybulle for defensive player of the year.

Since the inception of the defensive award 16 years ago, it's the first time all three awards have gone to the same school in the same season.

Matisse Thybulle and Jaylen Nowell, dominant forces that led the Washington Huskies to the Pac-12 Conference regular-season championship, were named to the 10-member All-Pac-12 first team Monday, as was Washington State's Robert Franks. UW's Noah Dickerson was an honorable mention. It was the fifth time in Pac-12 history UW had three selections.

For those who look upon on the NCAA men's basketball industry as only slightly less corrupt than the Pentagon, more eyebrows broke the arch limit Friday. Louisiana State coach Will Wade was suspended after a report that he was recorded on an FBI wiretap talking to convicted fraudster Christian Dawkins about making payments to a recruit who became his starting point guard.

The annual trip to the Bay Area brought the Huskies men's basketball team back to earth. But at least they are not beneath it.

Three days after a grim loss to a Cal team that had been winless in Pac-12 Conference play, Washington rediscovered its defense just enough to hang on, 62-61 against Stanford Sunday afternoon in Palo Alto.

As long as Seattle-area college sports fans keep eyes on the Huskies' success this season in football and men's basketball, there's not much urgency to ask about that smoke rising on the Pac-12 Conference horizon. Then again, the University of Washington is perhaps only a Jaylen Nowell ankle sprain or a torn labrum for Jacob Eason from feeling the heat like everyone else.

For more than a half Saturday night in Pullman, the Huskies, who lost at Arizona State a week earlier, looked as if they were ready to resurrect last season's late fade. But senior Noah Dickerson wasn't having it, getting his final bucket and rebound of an 18-and-10 evening with a tip-in that sealed Washington's 72-70 victory (box) over Washington State.

It is popular these days to bash the Pac-12 Conference for its competitive lameness in football and men's basketball. Relative to other Power 5 conferences in the big revenue sports, the Pac-12 is doing a masterful Jar-Jar Binks impression.

No one is quite sure of the source of the malaise, so the designated target of scorn is Commissioner Larry Scott, who has yet to brick a free throw or drop a touchdown pass.

For the basketball connoisseur, the taking of a charging foul is a sly, tasty morsel of the game, not something fated to take the top off an arena. But as the season's first sellout was ready to rock Hec Ed Saturday afternoon, Sam Timmins executed a flop that popped rivets in the old barn.

"That," Timmins said with a huge grin, "was a moment three years in the making."

A valiant effort in the hostile confines of McCarthey Athletic Center in Spokane was thwarted when Rui Hachimura's jumper with .6 seconds left gave unbeaten and No. 1-ranked Gonzaga an 81-79 win over UW.

In the final seconds of the first half, after the Huskies missed a short field goal to keep their lead at 14-0, BYU was in desperate search for a way to avoid irrelevance. Instead, they ran into Mr. Irrepressible.

Actually, LB Ben Burr-Kervin caught them from behind. The national defensive player of the week roared up along the sideline behind RB Lopini Katoa as he crossed the BYU 20.

Matisse Thybulle opted not to join 236 undergrads and international players declaring early entry for the NBA draft June 21. The Pac-12 Conference defensive player of the year is returning for his senior season at the University of Washington.

Despite a fade in the final six weeks, the Washington men's hoops turnaround under first-year head coach Mike Hopkins was a revelation. He took holdovers from the collapsed regime of Lorenzo Romar, added a local recruit he convinced to stay, Jaylen Nowell, instilled organization and inspiration, and went from nine wins to 21.

When Maryland Baltimore County Credit Union Mini-Mart puts its stamp on the NCAA men's basketball tourney, the apocalypse is nigh. Then again, if the Cubs can win a World Series, the Eagles can win a Super Bowl and 44-year-old Ichiro can still be a starting outfielder in Seattle (well, wait: The last one is more pathetic than absurd), then . . . we all may be in the same Salvador Dali painting.

Thank you! Art Thiel and Steve Rudman

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